Nothing gets past him

Monday

Dec 27, 2010 at 12:01 AMDec 27, 2010 at 12:07 PM

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jaroslav Halak was in his element last night.

The St. Louis Blues goaltender made a name for himself last spring by turning away a ton of shots while with the Montreal Canadians in the playoffs. Now a member of the Blues after an offseason trade, Halak made 32 saves last night for his fourth shutout of the season as St. Louis blanked the slumping Nashville Predators 2-0.

“Obviously, I like these kind of games,” Halak said. “I think everyone likes more shots than few shots.”

David Backes provided the offense for Halak, scoring both goals for the Blues.

The Blues extended their winning streak to three games. Halak has been in goal for all three of those contests. Last night’s shutout was the 13th of his career.

Nashville’s Pekka Rinne was nearly equal to Halak. He stopped 24 shots for Nashville, which has lost four straight. The Predators have scored just three goals in those four contests.

“I thought our pace and competitive level were better,” Nashville Coach Barry Trotz said. “We just didn’t find the back of the net.”

The Blues did not give the Predators any help, as St. Louis was not called for a penalty for the first time since April 1, 2004, against Detroit. Nashville was only whistled for one infraction, and that did not come until 4:47 remained in the contest when the Predators’ Joel Ward was sent off for tripping.

“These are the kind of games that if you don’t win, you look back on them in April,” Backes said. “It’s always big to get two points against anyone. When you’re not doing that in the Western Conference, you’re sliding in a free fall.”

Backes got the Blues’ first goal without any help. He intercepted a clearing pass at center, skated in along the right boards and cut to the right circle where he beat Rinne with a wrist shot 1:45 into the second period.

“I was not at a very good angle,” Backes said. “I probably should have dumped that in and got a line change. I don’t know if he was expecting me to shoot from that angle. I’ll take it.”

Rinne admitted the shot caught him off guard.

“It was tough to catch because it came so close to my head,” he said. “It hit the side of my face and went in.

“That’s not the one you would like to see deciding the game. You shoot 20 times from same spot and it maybe goes in once or twice.”

With 16.8 seconds left, Backes scored an empty-net goal to clinch it for the Blues.